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Marissa Cornell Ms.

Sparrow History 9 9/26/13 Bibliography

Barker, Joanne. Indigenous. Encyclopedia of Race and Racism. Macmilllan Reference USA, 2008. Gale Virtual Reference Library. This resource is about the problems of indigenous people like the Maori, who are mentioned. It also talks about the indigenous peoples rights. It is trustworthy because it is in an encyclopedia about race and racism.

Hanson, F. Allan. Maori Religion. World Religions. New York: Macmillan Library Reference USA, 1987. Macmillan Compendium. World History In Context. This article is about the Maoris religious beliefs like tapu, which is a disease in the state of mind. It also talks about their gods and other important beliefs that are part of their religion.

Majurey, Paul F. Atkins, Helen. Morrison, Vicki. Hovell, Tama. Maori Values Supplement. Atkins Holm Joseph Majurey Limited. December 2010. This source is a book about the Maoris beliefs about everything, including environmental beliefs, cultural beliefs, and land beliefs. It is trustworthy because it is a book.

Maori. Britannica Encyclopedia. Britannica School High. This site talks about the fight the Maori put out to keep their land and culture. It also talks about Maori culture present day. It is trustworthy because it is on a trustworthy site (Britannica).

Maori. Macmillan Encyclopedia of World Slavery. Ed. Paul Finkelman and Joseph Calder Miller. New York: Macmillan Reference USA, 1998. World History In Context. This article

is about Maori slavery during the time that the Europeans were colonizing New Zealand. It talks about how the Maori slaves were treated, and also how they were captured by the settlers and made slaves.

McAlonn, Jim. Land Ownership- Maori and Land Ownership., Te Ara- the Encyclopedia of New Zealand, updated July 13, 2013. This source talks about the Treaty of Waitangi, and the land loss that the Maori people have experienced. It also talks a little bit about the Maoris beliefs about their land. It is trustworthy because it is a government site.

Mcgibbon, Ian C. New Zealand. Encyclopedia of the Age of Industry and Empire. Ed. John Merriman and Jay Winter. Charles Scribners Sons, 2008. Gale Virtual Reference Library. This page talks about the Maori culture and how it changed. Also it talks about the conflicts that the Maori and European settlers had. This is trustworthy because it is on the Gale Virtual Reference site.

New Zealand Settles Maori Land Claims. New York Times. New York Times, October 5, 1996. This is an article saying on October 4, 1996, the New Zealand government agreed to settle Maori land claims, which was their way of apologizing to the Maori people for taking half of their land. The claims gave them land and $117 million. Also it gave them some traditional fishing rights. The government also agreed to make 47 parts of the island the traditional Maori name, in addition to the European name.

Sciolino, Elaine. After Long Resistance, France Returns Mummified Maori Heads to New Zealand. New York Times. New York Times, January 23, 2012. This is an article about when a France museum returned 20 Maori warrior heads back to New Zealand, because New Zealand wanted to respect the dead. It says before they sent them back, they took DNA

samples. It also talks about the Maori history about how they tattooed their heads. The debate about the head was whether they were a body part or an art because of the tattoos on the heads.

Sinclair, Keith. The Maoris In New Zealand History. History Today. History Today Ltd., 2012. History Today Volume: 30 Issue: 7 1980. This is an article all about the Maori from when their population was first discovered to what they are doing now. In this article, I focused on mainly the racial discrimination in the early times when European settlers first came, and I also focused on the racial discrimination that they have now, and the anti-Maori group that formed called the Brown-Power. Also about how the culture is celebrated today in New Zealand schools.

Sinclair, Keith. Maori Wars: Origins. The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Ed. A. H. McLintock. 1996. Encyclopedia of New Zealand. This article talks about the series of battles fought between the Maori tribe and the settlers of New Zealand in the 1800s. These are called the Maori Wars. Also it talks about the King Movement, and Maori Nationalism.

Sinclair, Keith. New Zealand Declared A British Colony. History Today. History Today Ltd., 2012. History Today Volume: 30 Issue: 7 1980. This is about the how the Maori adapted to the European culture when the Europeans first came. It is also about how the Europeans overthrew the Maori and came into power.

Sorrenson, Maurice Peter Keith. The Effects Of The Wars On The Maori People. An Encyclopedia Of New Zealand 1966. Ed. A. H McLintock, 1966. This page talks about what the Maori thought about the wars, and how bloody the wars were. It also talks about the Taranaki movement. It is a government website so you can trust it.

Story: Maori Education-matauranga. The Encyclopedia of New Zealand.

Webster, Stephen. Maori hapuu and their history. The Australian Journal of Anthropology. Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 1997. Proquest. This is about the Maori during the 1950s and 1970s, and the big cultural events that happened.

Wilson, John. European Discovery Of New Zealand- Abel Tasman. The Encyclopedia Of New Zealand. July 9, 2013. This page talks about the Dutch explorer Abel Tasman and his and his crews encounter with the Maori that killed four of his men.

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